logo
South Africa's EFF party seeks to block fuel tax increase

South Africa's EFF party seeks to block fuel tax increase

Reuters03-06-2025

JOHANNESBURG, June 3 (Reuters) - South African ultra-left opposition party, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) went to court on Tuesday to try to block a fuel tax increase that the finance minister proposed in last month's budget.
The 4% increase in the levy South Africans pay on petrol and diesel is due to kick in on Wednesday, but the EFF wants the High Court to suspend it on the basis that it is unjust and that the minister did not follow proper parliamentary process.
"This increase places an unjust burden on the working class and the poor, who are already reeling from rising costs of living, stagnant wages, and ongoing economic hardship," the EFF said in a statement before a court hearing in Cape Town.
In a sworn statement, Minister Enoch Godongwana said he had the right to raise the fuel levy and that the EFF's case appeared aimed at blocking passage of the budget, which he already had revised twice due to disagreements in the coalition government.
Godongwana said that if the court blocks the tax increase, it would leave a revenue shortfall of at least 3.5 billion rand ($196 million), which would have to be recovered through additional borrowing, taxes or spending cuts.
He has already backtracked on a contentious plan to raise value-added tax, under pressure from the second-biggest political party in the coalition, the Democratic Alliance, and others outside it.
Investors want to see evidence that Africa's biggest economy can rein in spending and hit revenue targets after a steep rise in public debt over the past two decades.
($1 = 17.8613 rand)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

World Bank Group considers $500 million boost for South Africa's transmission expansion
World Bank Group considers $500 million boost for South Africa's transmission expansion

Reuters

time6 hours ago

  • Reuters

World Bank Group considers $500 million boost for South Africa's transmission expansion

CAPE TOWN, June 20 (Reuters) - The World Bank Group is considering financing $500 million of South Africa's participation in a new credit guarantee facility meant to unlock private financing for a massive transmission grid expansion plan, a senior bank official told Reuters. South Africa is courting private investment for an ambitious plan to add 14,500 km of new lines and enhanced transformer capacity over the next decade, at an estimated total cost of $25 billion, as it looks to emerge from a decade of crippling power cuts that have battered the economy. The proposed credit guarantee vehicle aims to help overcome transmission infrastructure bottlenecks that have held back some 20 gigawatts of renewable energy from connecting to the national electricity network, according to Standard Bank. Many of the renewable projects are situated in the sun-baked Northern Cape or windswept Western and Eastern Cape regions, far from existing transmission corridors linking most of South Africa to the coal-powered generation plants in the north. Operating as a stand-alone entity, the credit guarantee vehicle would issue guarantees instead of South Africa's treasury and would cover payment defaults, for instance, should something go awry during the roll-out. "We could cover or be committed to finance half a billion U.S. dollars of the government of South Africa's first loss or junior capital participation," Yadviga Semikolenova, a senior World Bank manager, said late on Thursday. South Africa has sought not to put further pressure on its strained finances by offering additional sovereign guarantees, as it faces lacklustre growth, high debt-servicing costs and the failure to agree a VAT hike within the government coalition this year. The treasury has committed to providing junior or first loss capital of 20%, which will be an initial $100 million before moving up to $500 million. The credit guarantee vehicle aims to eventually grow to $2.5 billion, an April 4 treasury document shows. The document, seen by Reuters, details a package under discussion with the World Bank Group that includes a loan from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development to finance the treasury's junior capital and a potential $100 million direct injection from the International Finance Corporation. The bank's Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency is also considering reinsurance and political risk cover. Approval from the World Bank Group board was expected later this year, treasury officials said. The treasury said in April it had sought backing for the facility from several development financiers, including the Development Bank of Southern Africa, African Development Bank, Germany's KfW and British International Investment. The DBSA said it was considering participating while BII said it could not comment on any transaction that it has not made a commitment to or announced.

South African rand flat as uncertainty over Middle East conflict hangs over markets
South African rand flat as uncertainty over Middle East conflict hangs over markets

Reuters

time12 hours ago

  • Reuters

South African rand flat as uncertainty over Middle East conflict hangs over markets

JOHANNESBURG, June 20 (Reuters) - The South African rand was trading almost flat early on Friday, as investors worried about conflict in the Middle East, with Israel and Iran's air war entering a second week and a decision on potential U.S. involvement. At 0649 GMT the rand traded at 18.0250 against the dollar , little changed from Thursday's close. The U.S. dollar also traded flat against a basket of currencies with investors in limbo after the White House said on Thursday that Trump will decide in the next two weeks whether the U.S. will get involved in the Israel-Iran war. No major domestic data releases are due on Friday but domestically, investors will look to producer inflation (ZAPPIY=ECI), opens new tab and leading indicator (ZALEAD=ECI), opens new tab data set to be released next week, to gauge the health of Africa's most industrialised economy. South Africa's benchmark 2035 government bond was marginally stronger in early deals, as the yield fell 2 basis points to 10.12%.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store